ICPS

2019 International Convention of Psychological Science · 2019

The Effects of Exposure to High Versus Low Death-Accepting Advance Directive

Paris, France · March 2019

Posters · Social Psychology

  • Kathryn Kouchi
    The University of Alabama
  • James Hamilton
    The University of Alabama

Abstract

We exposed emerging adults to death-accepting vs. death-avoiding advance directive information about a fictitious other. Among non-religious participants, reading the death-accepting advance directive caused increased death-acceptance. In contrast, highly religious participants in that condition became less death-accepting compared to those who read the low-acceptance advance directive.

Positive Psychology

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